June 2006's Issue

President Hugo Chávez and oil - from the outside you get the general impression there’s nothing else much worth knowing about Venezuela. You would never suppose that a sea change has been sweeping through this extraordinary place for more than seven years, throwing up awkward questions as it goes. Is peaceful revolution a contradiction in terms? Does the term ‘Bolivarian’ mean anything at all? Can economic orthodoxy and the American Empire be successfully defied? The NI reports from a country where ordinary people are living through far from ordinary times.

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The distinctive topography of the Maldives – an archipelago of more than 1,200 small islands – allows for a strict demarcation of function. One for the capital, another for rubbish, 80 or so for tourist resorts, and one for torturing political prisoners.

New Internationalist reports on issues of world poverty and inequality. We focus attention on the unjust relationship between the powerful and the powerless worldwide in the fight for global justice. More about our work